"The 77's will take you on a journey
through the past, present, and future of rock & roll"
- Island Records radio advertisement, 1987.

The 77s have been on this journey for over twenty years.
Michael Roe, guitars/vocals, Mark Harmon, bass, and Bruce
Spencer, drums, have been at the core of the band for many
years. All three are exemplary musicians and composers; on
any given night fans are fixated on what one of the band members
is pulling off. To take it all in can be fascinating, even
exhilarating.
For those in the know, the above observation makes sense -
especially to those who follow them on tours, collect and
trade live tapes, and spend endless nights on chat boards
and mailing lists discussing the band. As for the rest of
you, a little history:
When the 77s came of age in 1984, with the brilliant calling
card of All Fall Down (Exit/A&M), it was evident
to those who heard it that this was something new. For anyone
truly in love with rock & roll, who loved passion, hooks,
harmony, three (or four) chords and the truth, here was a
band that delivered.

And if you listened to college radio that year, you could
hear it. A look at the college charts found the 77s in the
same company as the Cure, Let's Active, The Replacements,
The Church, and others. What the 7's had that the other bands
didn't was the history of all rock & roll breathing and
pulsating under a brand new sound... Jerry Lee, Elvis, The
Rolling Stones, The Doors, all there right in the room with
more contemporary influences like The Smiths or the Comsat
Angels.

Live, the shows were increasingly incendiary, Mike Roe channeling
everything that had come before him and spitting out a new
vision on guitar and vocals long into the night. If your idea
of a great time was coming to a place where The Velvet Underground
and U2 might meet, this was it.

The group's video (and future show stopper) Mercy Mercy
was aired on MTV. In Europe, where Polygram released the album,
the group played festivals and showcases like the Pandora's
Music Box festival, and videos aired on Music Box, the continent's
equivalent to MTV.

A change of distribution for Exit brought the small independent
to Island Records for the 1987 album, 77's. Here, the band
further cemented their musical vision and brought a tougher,
live sound to the studio. Rolling Stone noticed "...comes
up with a sound that suggests not only they know where they're
coming from but also that they're going places," and
Rock Express was even more effusive - "Score one for
energy and sheer joie de rock. The 77's are a four piece band
that play garage rock like they invented the thing."

The radio single Can't Get Over It was a top add
for weeks at alternative radio and at some stations like KZEL
in Oregon (at the time the #2 AOR station in the state) they
went as much as four cuts deep. If a little album like U2's
The Joshua Tree had not been out at the same time, it
might have even been more noticed.

The label soon folded, and the band was to go dormant until
a creative rebirth in the early 90's. Since that time, the
group has gone the independent route for the most part, releasing
some nine albums, growing in stature with each passing year.
The beauty of the catalog is its sheer breadth and scope -
there may not be another band that's consistently offered
up so many diverse musical statements, yet still sounding
like the same band.

Want to hear the last great power trio album? Try Tom
Tom Blues. Thought progressive pop was dead? Listen to
ep. Drowning With Land In Sight took on Led Zep and
found the soul of Blind Willie Johnson underneath. A Golden
Field Of Radioactive Crows is about as nervously edgy
as an album bleeding with gorgeous melodies can get. Through
it all, the lyrics are as much a key to the appeal of this
band as the music is - these are lyrics you can relate to.
For everyone who's been burned in relationships, let down
by family, friends, and life - had their faith consistently
challenged and wondered how to keep afloat, the songs let
you know they've been there, done that - indeed, doing that
- and yet provide a sense of hope amidst the loss.

Oh, and they still kick ass live. Go see them, and find out
what is still one of America's criminally best-kept secrets.
On a good night, you'll go home happy and satisfied. On a
great night, and they are still comin', you'll feel you just
saw a torch being passed on. And you were there.